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SpaceCadet

@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl

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SpaceCadet,
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SpaceCadet,
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No it isn’t.

It’s more like saying: if that guy you hang out with keeps pushing you into the water and you almost drown every time, perhaps you should stop hanging out with that guy.

Of course, that’s not what people who are in an abusive relationship typically want to hear.

SpaceCadet,
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

When people tell you to use Linux, they’re not telling you that to solve your immediate problem (e.g. your “show desktop” icon has been replaced with a different icon), but they are telling you to get out of your abusive relationship with Microsoft, because that is the real problem: Microsoft does not respect you, the end-user of their product, and this kind of abusive shit will keep happening for as long as you keep using Windows.

SpaceCadet,
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

That’s exactly the kind of shit abused people say to justify staying with their abusive partner. (“Oh it’s not so bad” - she says with a black eye - “and he’s really sweet normally”)

Yes in the short term it can be painful to leave an abusive person you’ve come to depend upon, but in the long term it’s always the better solution.

SpaceCadet,
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For people like me who took that advice: pretty damn great actually, thanks for asking!

SpaceCadet,
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Even if it’s only one, I will have helped one person, unlike you who has only been bitching and moaning.

SpaceCadet,
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It was a company almost from the start. In the mid 90s Tatu Ylonen created ssh v1 and released it as freeware, then shortly afterwards apparently he regretted it and created ssh v2, made it proprietary and commercialized it with his company.

In the late 90s some OpenBSD guys then forked the unencumbered ssh v1 source to create OpenSSH and implemented ssh v2 with it and their ssh version eventually gained traction and became dominant.

SpaceCadet,
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

Tatu was also a bit of a d*ck about the thing. There were some GPL violations when he made the licensing more restrictive, and at one point he accused the OpenSSH project of violating his trademark, even though his original license permitted the use of the ssh name.

SpaceCadet, (edited )
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

It was a custom license more permissive than the BSD license.

It’s still part of the official OpenSSH license, see the first section here: cvsweb.openbsd.org/src/usr.bin/ssh/LICENCE?rev=HE…

SpaceCadet,
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

Is this an off-by-one error?

SpaceCadet,
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

elephant_generator.sh


<span style="color:#323232;">#!/bin/bash
</span><span style="color:#323232;">elephantCount=0
</span><span style="color:#323232;">for (( i=0; i<=${elephantCount}; i++ )); do
</span><span style="color:#323232;">    echo "Insert elephant ${i}"
</span><span style="color:#323232;">done
</span>
SpaceCadet,
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

Tunnels also don’t take away space from people. This nice looking tramway could be a nice promenade for people instead.

SpaceCadet,
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

Green space being used for vehicles instead of for people, even if it is public transport.

SpaceCadet,
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

It can and should be both whenever possible

Roads or tramlines don’t need greenery. It adds nothing.

It would be much better if this place was a promenade for people, with some benches, a playground for kids, maybe a place to sit and have lunch, … and the transportation stuffed out of sight underground, aka a subway.

rail only needs, well, rails

And overhead lines … which trees often interfere with.

SpaceCadet,
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

Looking at the way this particular road is constructed, and the age of the trees, I guarantee that this space was a promenade before and the space to build a tramway has been taken from pedestrians (people) not from cars.

SpaceCadet,
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

Asphalt field? Your comment makes zero sense.

Have you never seen a promenade with trees, greenery, benches, … ? You know a place where it’s nice for people to spend time instead of space taken up by yet another vehicle?

SpaceCadet,
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

Otherwise a second PiHole set as the secondary DNS in DHCP would keep things online.

No, that just creates time outs and delays when either of them is offline.

The proper way is to have a standby pihole that takes over the IP address of the main pihole when it goes down. It’s quite easy to achieve this with keepalived.

SpaceCadet,
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It was introduced by “Active Desktop”, which came with IE4. So if you installed IE4, you also got this on Windows 95.

SpaceCadet,
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Mental note: have to migrate my gitea instance over to forgejo.

SpaceCadet,
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

If there isn’t one

Worse is if there is one but it says: [OPEN] Opened 7 years ago Updated 2 days ago, with a whole bunch of people commenting the equivalent of “me too”, and various things they tried to solve it, but no solution.

Pi-Hole or something else for network ad blocking?

I’ve been aware of pi-hole for a while now, but never bothered with it because I do most web browsing on a laptop where browser extensions like uBlock origin are good enough. However, with multiple streaming services starting to insert adds into my paid subscriptions, I’m looking to upgrade to a network blocker that will...

SpaceCadet,
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

Just wanted to chime in and say that with a pihole you can also have encryption if you point to a local resolver like cloudflared or unbound.

My pihole forwards everything to a cloudflared service running on 127.0.0.1:5353 to encrypt all my outgoing DNS queries, it was really easy to setup: docs.pi-hole.net/guides/dns/cloudflared/

SpaceCadet,
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

The encryption i was talking about is the encryption of your dns server

You mean encryption between the client and your DNS server, on your local network?

SpaceCadet,
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

Your computer is still using the power and it can damage it

Thats not how that works.

Sure it could cause some data loss, or corruption, or other software issues if the computer was in the middle of something like applying updates, but it should not cause hardware damage. All this applies to holding the powerbutton as well by the way.

or (really unlikely, on a shit connector) you get shocked.

Then you have bigger problems. You shouldn’t be using a connector that’s a shock or fire hazard in the first place.

But seriously about the only bad thing about it is perhaps some wear and tear on the connector that’s not designed to be plugged in and pulled out every day. Alternatively you could also “pull the power” by pressing a button on your powerstrip (if you have that), or by flipping the powersupply button at the back of the computer to off. It all does the same thing: it cuts the power to the computer instantly.

It’s also more convenient to hold the button instead of having to unplug and re-plug.

Yes, but holding the button is not instant and it relies on a software function in the bios which can be buggy. Usually holding the button doesn’t even complete poweroff the system but puts it in a special “standby” power state where the motherboard still keeps providing power to some components. There are some issues that can only be resolved by a complete poweroff.

SpaceCadet,
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

Windows doesn’t reboot when things are running.

Plenty of reports to the contrary

reddit.com/…/windows_10_restarted_while_i_was_in_…

SpaceCadet,
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

Yeah something like that. Welding is absolutely something that requires skill and talent.

I have a electromechanical engineering degree myself, at some point during my education we had some labs where we did basic welding, milling, lathing and whatnot. The intention was not to become experts at it, but to get notions of what it entails. I quickly understood that theoretical understanding and hands-on experience are entirely different things, and require an entirely different skillset.

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